Books about the "Comfort women:"

Maria Rosa Henson "Comfort Woman: A Filipina's Story of Prostitution and Slavery Under the Japanese Military," Rowman & Littlefield (1999) Read reviews or order

George Hicks, "The Comfort Women: Japan's Brutal Regime of Enforced Prostitution in the Second World War," Norton, (1997) Read reviews or order

Korean Council for Women Drafted for Military Sexual Slavery by Japan, "True Stories of the Korean Comfort Women," Cassell, (1996). Read reviews or order

Joshua Pilzer, "Hearts of Pine: Songs in the Lives of Three Korean Survivors of the Japanese 'Comfort Women'," Read reviews or order

S.C. Schellstede & Soon Mi Yu, "Comfort Women Speak: Testimony by
Sex Slaves of the Japanese Military," Holmes & Meier, (2000) The
book includes a New United Nations Human Rights Report. Read reviews or order

C. Sarah Soh, "The Comfort Women: Sexual Violence and Postcolonial Memory in Korea and Japan," University of Chicago Press, (2009). Read reviews or order

Sponsored link:

Video, web sites, an article and a movie:

A You Tube video titled "Endangered Japan: A small survey on the conflict between Japan and Korea. Book II: Sex, Lies, and Comfort Women," undated, at: https://www.youtube.com/

The author writes: "On March 28, 2013, this video was reported by some group of people and suspended probably by their comrades working in YouTube for unknown reasons. If you watch this video, you will know that this is an impartial portrait of what Comfort Women were actually like and doesn't violate any article of the Community Guidelines of YouTube. I strongly protest against the infringement of freedom of speech."

Brough's Books maintains a list of books which describe wartime
atrocities allegedly committed by Japanese forces. See:
http://www.dropbears.com/. Most deal with the Rape of
Nanking and the Comfort Women atrocities.

Dai Sil Kim Gibson has also produced a movie: "Silence Broken." It
was broadcast on PBS on 2000-MAY. Excerpt from a review by Library Journal,
2000-JUL:

"English subtitles communicate the raw stories of these women,
some only children when they were taken, who were repeatedly raped, abused,
forced into prostitution, and shipped like military supplies to far off
places. When the survivors returned home, their own government shamed them
into silence. Today, many Japanese leaders and veterans deny responsibility
and refused to apologize or provide compensation."